How to Cite Generative AI in APA Style: A Simple Guide for Beginners
Welcome! As generative AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini become more common in academic life, it's essential to know how to properly credit them in your work. The guiding principle behind citing AI is transparency. It allows your readers to understand and evaluate the role these powerful tools played in your research and writing process.
The American Psychological Association (APA) has provided clear, straightforward guidelines to help students and researchers navigate this new territory. This guide will walk you through the core concept of citing AI in APA Style.
There are two primary ways to cite generative AI, and your choice depends on how you used the tool. This guide will teach you how to choose the right format for your situation and how to structure your citations perfectly every time. Let's get started by understanding your two main options.
Video summary of this blog
1. Choosing the Right Citation Format: A Quick Comparison
Your first step is to decide whether you need to cite the specific conversation you had with the AI (the "chat") or the AI tool in general. The right choice depends on whether you want your reader to be able to see the exact AI-generated text you are referencing.
This table will help you decide which format is right for you.
When to Use: This is the preferred method when you need to quote or paraphrase specific text from an AI conversation. Use this format only if the AI tool provides a shareable, unique URL that allows your reader to retrieve and view the original chat. | When to Use: This method is for situations where citing a specific chat is unhelpful or unavailable. Key examples include when you have used an AI tool to:<br> <br> * Edit or refine your own writing<br> * Translate text for your own understanding<br> * Brainstorm ideas<br> * As part of a study's methodology where participant confidentiality is a concern |
Now that you can tell the two formats apart, let's learn how to build the first and most common type of AI citation: the specific chat reference.
2. Format #1: How to Cite a Specific AI Chat
This format is your go-to when you are quoting or paraphrasing from a specific, retrievable AI conversation that has a unique, shareable URL.
Here is the official APA template to follow.
AI Company Name. (year, month day). Title of chat in italics [Description, such as Generative AI chat]. Tool Name/Model. URL of the chat
Breaking Down the Components
Each part of the reference has a specific purpose. This table explains exactly what information to include for each component.
Component | What to Include |
Author | |
Date | Use the full, specific date the chat took place: the year, month, and day. |
Title | The title is the specific title of your chat session, which should be italicized. After the title, add the bracketed description [Generative AI chat]. |
Source | The source includes two parts: first, the name of the AI tool or model (e.g., Claude Sonnet 4), followed by the unique, shareable URL of the chat. |
Pro Tip: Before creating your reference, consider editing the title of the chat within the AI tool itself to be more descriptive and helpful for your readers (e.g., changing a generic title like "Grammar Questions" to "Analysis of Grammar Concepts for High School Graduates").
Example in Action
Here is a complete reference list entry for a specific AI chat, followed by its corresponding in-text citations.
• Reference Example: Anthropic. (2025, May 20). Essential grammar topics for high school graduates [Generative AI chat]. Claude Sonnet 4. https://claude.ai/share/329173b2-ec93-4663-ac68-4f65ea4f166d
• In-Text Citations:
◦ Parenthetical: (Anthropic, 2025)
◦ Narrative: Anthropic (2025)
Next, we'll explore the second format for when you've used an AI tool more broadly and a specific chat link isn't necessary.
3. Format #2: How to Cite an AI Tool Generally
This format is based on the APA template for citing software. It is used when a link to a specific chat is not helpful, not available, or not appropriate for your purpose, such as when you used AI to help edit your paper.
Here is the official APA template for citing a general AI tool.
AI Company Name. (year). Tool Name/Model in Italics and Title Case [Description; e.g., Large language model]. URL of the tool
Breaking Down the Components
This table explains what to include for each element when citing the tool itself.
Component | What to Include |
Author | Just like the chat format, the author is the company responsible for the tool (e.g., OpenAI). |
Date | Use only the year of the version you used or the year of the most recent update. If that's not available, you can use the copyright date listed on the website. |
Title | The title is the name of the tool (e.g., ChatGPT) or the specific model (e.g., ChatGPT-5) written in italics. After the title, add a bracketed description of the technology, such as [Large language model]. |
Source | The source is the direct URL to access the tool. A crucial rule: if the author and the publisher are the same company (like OpenAI), you do not need to repeat the company name here. Simply provide the URL. |
Example in Action
Here is a full reference for the general ChatGPT tool, which is a common example.
• Reference Example: OpenAI. (2025). ChatGPT [Large language model]. https://chatgpt.com/
• In-Text Citations:
◦ Parenthetical: (OpenAI, 2025)
◦ Narrative: OpenAI (2025)
A Key Insight on Version Numbers: Past APA guidance recommended including version information (e.g., "Mar 14 version"). However, the APA Style team no longer advises this by default, because most AI tools have stopped providing version numbers. The current best practice is to be specific by using the model name in the title (e.g., ChatGPT-5) when that information is available.
With the two main citation formats covered, a common question remains: what do you do with the prompts you used?
4. A Quick Guide to AI Prompts
You might be wondering, "Do I need to include my prompts in the reference list?"
The simple and direct answer is: No, prompts are not included in the reference list.
Here's a breakdown of why APA excludes prompts from the formal reference entry:
• They don't fit the four required APA reference elements (author, date, title, source).
• They don't help readers retrieve the original work, which is the main purpose of a reference.
• They can be very long and often involve many rounds of refinement, making them impractical for a reference list.
The correct way to document your prompts is to describe them in the text of your paper itself (for example, in your Method section) or to place the full text of your prompts in an appendix. This approach ensures transparency, helps readers understand your methodology, and can even aid other researchers in replicating or extending your work.
Finally, let's cover the few cases where you might not need to cite AI at all.
5. When You Might Not Need to Cite AI
According to APA guidance, a formal citation is likely not necessary in two specific scenarios.
1. Using AI as a Search Engine If you use an AI tool simply to find sources—much like you would use Google or a library database—you do not cite the AI tool. Instead, you must find, read, and cite the original sources themselves.
2. A Crucial Note on Verification: It is essential that you verify any sources provided by an AI. These tools are known to "hallucinate" or invent sources that seem plausible but are not real. As the author, you are responsible for ensuring every source you cite is accurate and real.
3. Using AI Integrated into Common Software You do not need to cite AI features that are built into everyday software. For example, using Microsoft Word's Copilot for editing or Canva's AI features for image creation is similar to using a spell-checker. These tools are considered part of the common software and do not require a citation.
Exceptions: When You Should Still Cite
Even in the scenarios above, there are times when citing the AI tool is necessary for transparency.
• For example, if you are writing a literature review or meta-analysis, you would describe your search strategy. If you used an AI tool as part of that strategy, you should name and cite the tool.
• Similarly, if you used AI that is integrated into specialized equipment (e.g., AI-powered glasses in an experiment), you must describe and cite it in your Method section, just as you would any other research equipment.
6. Key Takeaways
To conclude, citing generative AI is all about transparency and responsibility. Here are three essential rules to remember as you incorporate AI into your academic work.
1. Be Transparent Always disclose if you used AI in your research or writing process. This is typically done in the Method section for research papers or in the introduction for essays.
2. Choose the Right Format Cite the specific, shareable chat if you are quoting or paraphrasing its output directly. Cite the general tool if you used it for broader tasks like brainstorming, editing, or summarizing.
3. You Are Responsible Remember that as the human author, you are ultimately responsible for the accuracy, integrity, and critical thought in your entire paper. This includes any text, ideas, or sources generated by an AI. Always fact-check, critically evaluate, and infuse your own voice into AI-generated content to maintain ownership of your work.
References:
APA Style Guide and Publication Manual DOIs
• https://apastyle.apa.org/blog/how-to-cite-chatgpt (Source of the initial APA guidance on citing ChatGPT)
• https://apastyle.apa.org/blog/cite-generative-ai-allowed (Source discussing if AI is "allowed" in APA Style)
• https://apastyle.apa.org/blog/cite-generative-ai-references (Source providing reference formats for generative AI)
• https://apastyle.apa.org/blog/cite-generative-ai-search-software (Source addressing AI used as a search engine or integrated into software)
• https://doi.org/10.1037/0000165-000 (DOI for the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association)
General AI Tool URLs (For General Citation)
These URLs are used when citing the AI tool as a whole:
• https://chat.openai.com/chat (URL provided in the 2023 example reference for ChatGPT)
• https://chatgpt.com/ (URL provided in a general example reference for ChatGPT)
• https://claude.ai/new (URL provided in a general example reference for Claude 4 Sonnet)
• https://gemini.google.com (URL provided in a general example reference for Gemini 2.5 Flash)
• https://www.perplexity.ai/ (URL provided in a general example reference for Perplexity AI)
Specific AI Chat URLs (For Retrievable Citation Examples)
These are unique URLs cited in the sources as examples of retrievable AI chat references:
• https://claude.ai/share/329173b2-ec93-4663-ac68-4f65ea4f166d (Example chat from Anthropic)
• https://g.co/gemini/share/a1306ce12929 (Example chat from Google Gemini)
• https://chatgpt.com/share/68a77b60-0ee4-800c-9acc-cd3fd573c311 (Example chat from OpenAI ChatGPT)
• https://www.perplexity.ai/search/a457cb8c-c663-4c9b-b34e-cb03d8108b35 (Example chat from Perplexity AI)
External References and DOIs
The sources reference external research, news articles, and organizational statements concerning AI ethics, environmental impact, and inaccuracy:
• https://retractionwatch.com/2025/06/30/springer-nature-book-on-machine-learning-is-full-of-made-up-citations/ (Retraction Watch article by Aksenfeld, R.)
• https://www.npr.org/2025/05/20/nx-s1-5405022/fake-summer-reading-list-ai (NPR article by Blair, E.)
• https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joule.2023.09.004 (DOI for de Vries, A. article on energy footprint)
• https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2506.08872 (DOI for Kosmyna et al. article on "Your brain on ChatGPT")
• https://openai.com/index/sycophancy-in-gpt-4o/ (OpenAI article on Sycophancy in GPT-4o)
• https://cee.illinois.edu/news/AIs-Challenging-Waters (Center for Secure Water article by Pinheiro Privette, A.)
• https://www.selc.org/press-release/new-images-reveal-elon-musks-xai-datacenter-has-nearly-doubled-its-number-of-polluting-unpermitted-gas-turbines/ (Southern Environmental Law Center press release)
• https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.241776 (DOI for Peters & Chin-Yee, B. article on generalization bias)
• https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.70000 (DOI for Wakeling et al. article on citation accuracy)

No comments:
Post a Comment